David Cameron jogger incident: 'How good is Cameron's security if I managed to run between it before they stopped me?'

A still from footage of the incident outside Leeds Civic Hall Steve Gardner | ITV News

A jogger who sparked security fears after he collided with David Cameron has said he did not see the Prime Minister and had no idea what had happened until afterwards.

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Dean Farley, 28, denied the collision was some sort of protest, saying that he was “not a particularly political-minded person”.

And he said: “It begs the question, how good is Cameron's security if I managed to run between it before they stopped me?”

Mr Farley BBC Radio 5 Live he was on his way to the gym to meet his personal trainer as he does nearly every lunchtime when the incident occurred outside Leeds Civic Hall yesterday.

He said: "I ran across the road and, for all I saw, a bunch of men in suits came out of the side of the Civic Hall.

"I dodged in and out and around and the next thing I know I've got a half dozen suited men haranguing me and manhandling me to the floor.

"The whole while I'm asking them, 'What's going on? Who are you?'.

"I then was told I was being detained to prevent a further breach of the peace. And then cuffs were slapped on behind me. This is the first instance I knew that it was the police that had come for me."

Mr Farley added: "I didn't see David Cameron. I didn't know it was David Cameron until they let me out of the police van an hour later and told me what I'd actually done."

He said he asked the officers repeatedly what he had done as he was detained in the van.

He said one officer said to him: "You know what you've done, be quiet."

Mr Farley said: "I gathered I'd run into somebody quite important but I couldn't know it was David Cameron. This was supposed to be a secret meeting. No one knew he was in Leeds. Nobody said 'stop police' as I crossed the road. I couldn't see any uniformed officers as I crossed the road. There was no cordon.

"It begs the question, how good is Cameron's security if I managed to run between it before they stopped me?"

Mr Farley said he had no identification on him because he was going to the gym and his towel was wrapped around his hand, which the officers might have thought was a weapon.

"I've got earphones in, I'm going on a run. I've got my eyes to the floor and I didn't even see who it was. And nobody told me who it was," he said.

"I always thought if you asked a police officer why you were being detained they were supposed to tell you."

Asked whether it was difficult to run into the Prime Minister, he said: "Not at all. No. I got on to the pavement, dodged around one man who I assume was his security and I didn't know it was Cameron, as I've said, but I was directly into Cameron."

Cameron has insisted he has confidence in his police bodyguards, but the Metropolitan Police Service has announced it will carry out a review into the incident.

The Prime Minster said: "Could I put on the record for once the debt I owe to the close protection teams that look after me and the very good job that they do."

His official spokesman said Cameron expressed his "gratitude and confidence" in the protection team.

Downing Street will co-operate with the Met's review of the incident, the spokesman added.

Tory MP Mark Pritchard said lessons should be learned about how Mr Farley was allowed to get so close to the Prime Minister.

He said: "The Met Police have some of the best close protection officers in the world. However, this was a clear breach of security and could have been far more sinister in outcome.

"With the terror threat level increased, this cannot be allowed to happen again."